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For those that are perhaps seeing these transcriptions for the first time, the transcriptions may
give on first glance, the appearance of a great many typos, so I feel obligated to explain that the
abundance of y, m, and d represent abbreviations for year, month and day. Although you will find
most engravers follow similar patterns, it seems there are several different abbreviations used to
represent these three time terms including: y, yr, yrs, yr's & years; m. mo, mos, mo's, and months;
d. da, das, da's, and days and on rare occasions, h, hr, hrs, hr's, and hours. I tend not to use
commas except to seperate surname from given name, given name from date, except where found on actual
inscription, same goes for the [.] (period). When you see the symbol [_] (underscore), I use it to
represent missing or unreadable letters, or if a lot of letters are unreadable I may express it by
several periods, such as Jos...h . Sometimes you will find raised letters such as "
c" in surnames such as in McClain, or if the engraver
added smaller letters that were left out and added later, when I encounter them, tend to express them,
when possible, as found on the stone. Sometimes engravers will use the term Æ, this is just a term that
generally replaces the work "aged". One last comment, all actual text found engraved, will come first
in bold text. All comments, observations, personal knowledge remarks added by submitter, concerning an
individual, but not inscribed on stone, will then proceed in regular text. R.M. Sizelove.

These tombstone photos have been generously donated by Leland Rice, March 02, 2005.

Files contributed are for use by the OHGenWeb Tombstone Photo Project
and by the OHGenWeb Archives Project

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